After Burner II

Sega put an F-15e Strike Eagle on the cover, even though you control a variation of the F-14 Tomcat in the game.

PLAYERS: 1

PUBLISHER: Dempa (JP), Sega (US, EU)

DEVELOPER: Sega (port by Dempa)

GENRE: Shoot-em-up

RELEASE DATE: 03/23/90 – (JP), 07/90 – (US), 04/91 – (EU)

After Burner… II? Sega would like you to think so, but no. This isn’t a brand new entry in the franchise, but an upgrade to the original; like Street Fighter II Turbo was to Street Fighter II. After Burner II adds throttle control, three new levels, more missiles, and considerably more enemy planes. Not enough to warrant the Roman numeral “II”, but the throttle control in particular makes for a better experience.

For those who haven’t experienced the originalAfter Burner, you control an F-14 Skycat and your mission is to destroy any plane you see in and around God’s blue yonder. You have two weapons, an unlimited-round Vulcan 20mm cannon that fires automatically and a limited missile trove. You might think that the automatic fire would make the game easier, but this is not the case. Enemy planes bombard you from all directions and many of them won’t go down without a locked-on missile to the face.

Under a Tang-orange sky, one man tries not to get his butt killed…

After Burner was best experienced in the arcade via the infamous sit-down moving cabinet. As you steered the plane all over creation with the flight stick, your seat rotated horizontally while the cockpit rotated vertically. This visceral body jolting was thrilling, and it was also the best way to cover up the game’s limitations. Take away the rollercoaster cabinet and you’re left with a repetitive shooter, hampered particularly by the behind-the-plane camera that hinders your field of vision.

These Payday bars came out of nowhere!

After Burner II keeps the same limited camera view, but the ability to speed up or slow down with the throttle control is a significant boon. You’re no longer forced to watch helplessly as a missile careens toward your weak Skycat shell. While speeding up is usually the best course of action to avoid groups of missiles, Sega doesn’t allow the player to abuse their new powers. There are more planes than ever before in each level, and getting through them requires a mixture of your own missile attacks, speeding away, and/or twisting recklessly through the shrapnel.

Thanks, Mom.

At its best, After Burner II makes you feel like you’re surviving the worst air battles of your generation. Maneuvering foolishly through a dozen planes – all of which have launched missiles at you – and coming out the other side intact will get your heart racing.

I believe this counts as “The Danger Zone.”

That being said, the game does occasionally drift downwards into the Unfair Valley. Even if you’re able to control your janky Skycat with grace, locking on to more than a couple planes at a time is difficult, if not impossible. Later levels also add planes with increasing frequency, giving you little time to lock onto them. You’ll be lucky to get a couple missiles launched before you have to tuck your plane into whirlybird overdrive and avoid the carnage entirely.

The grass fails to provide a soft landing for your ragdoll remains.

After Burner II doesn’t differ enough from its predecessor to earn that “II,” but it is the best home version of After Burner I’ve ever played. The throttle control provides an additional depth that the original After Burner lacked and gives the sense that, if you master speeding up and slowing down at the right moments, you just might come out on top. Clearly the arcade, with its shakes, rattles and rolls, is the preferred way to immerse yourself in a dogfight. But if you’re actually looking to play the game and not just waste your laundry money, this Genesis port will teach you how to fly with the best of ’em.

It was the first analog controller and was made to more closely simulate control of Sega’s arcade games with analog control. While not made by Sega, it was used and a handful of first party Sega games all the way up to the Sega 32X. It has analog controls and shoulder buttons, pre dating the N64 and the SNES controller.

Anyway After Burner was I believe the first game to support analog control with this controller. And supposedly the US release still maintains the analog control option if you were somehow able to own one of these. Personally I’ve never played on one. But would love to one day. The thing looks tailor made for After burner with the throttle on the right , using should buttons for the buttons.

I love After Burner 2. Replaying it in the late 90s was one of the handful of things that rekindled my interest in Sega stuff. I must admit though, as much as I love it, the 32X version blows it out of the water.

There was something always special about After Burner. Maybe the rockin’ soundtrack, or the colorful sprites and nonstop action. It sure blows Galaxy Force out of the water. Even the scaled back Master system version was decent. I’m gonna have to go play it on my MAME arcade cabinet now.

I own a copy of Afterburner II, but danged if I can remember the last time I booted it up. It’s one of those games that is best relegated to quick 5-minute play sessions when you need to do some blastin’ but don’t have much time to do so. Sadly, I’ve never experienced the large arcade cabinet, only the stand-up cabinet with flight stick, and while it’s fun enough, the extreme challenge meant I always lasted a couple minutes and that was all. But then, that was the point of arcade games like that, was it not?

When I first played this game, I was very annoyed by the autofiring gun. But then I discovered that in the OPTIONS menu you can change the controller button functions, and one of the functions is for A = Fast/Thrust, B = Missile, C = Vulcan Gun. No more auto-firing gun! And the single Fast/Thrust button is pretty good for adding some throttle control when necessary!